i think it's Headhunter & Invisible - Luvdup
nice one thanks!
any idea what the track is being mixed into it???
i think it's Headhunter & Invisible - Luvdup
nice one thanks!
any idea what the track is being mixed into it???
As far as I know thickness of vinyl doesn't affect the sound at all.
i know dubstep ppl are vinyl obsessives but cant they ever just do a high quality single (ie cheaper) vinyl pressing? i dont think it would compromise the quality THAT much. ramadanman one should be really good if its got the stuff ive been hearing on radio lately.
apparently this got played at dmz too...
http://www.redbullmusicacademy.com/fileadmin/blog_files/daily_note_19.pdf
piece on how 'dubstep has changed everything'.
as a bit of a grimeist, im not *totally* convinced that geeneus saying dubstep was 'safe grime' was a compliment (i suppose blackdown would know as thats from his blog) but still, interesting read.
the people on that dsf thread about the mala album make me want it to be a full on brostep LP.
Crap article written by someone with a serious dubstep infatuation
i dunno if it was, i think it's a neutral statement of fact. geeneus has done more for dubstep - when no one else in the pirate sphere cared - than 99% of all other players, so in that context 'neutral' makes more sense...
i think it neatly summarizes how the genre no one wanted now has influenced very disparate genres (dubby techno, US rap, hype grime etc...)
Yeah, I think it's interesting that there's something or some combination of things about dubstep that make it blur boundaries and cross-pollinate interestingly with an unusually wide range of other genres - and it has left its mark on them as well as vice versa - but the article goes on like it's some kind of year zero for the whole of dance music. Which is getting a bit silly...It goes on as if dubstep is the savior of all electronic and dance music "Dubstep has changed everything. Absolutely everything". I just think it's a bit too much. And as for the influences on other genres, though certainly they exist, isn't it really the other way around; dubstep has been influenced by grime, techno, rap, it hasn't really made those genres change?